“Thank you, Commander. You’re right. I have to help my family.” He didn’t know what to do with himself for a moment and Thel, as she had done many times over the years, reached out to embrace him.
“You’re going to be okay. Good luck, Rich.”
James shook Rich’s hand and smiled. “I’m going to miss you, you crazy son-of-a-gun.”
“I’m going to miss you too, Commander. The world’s always ending when you’re around. It’s been kind of exciting.” He stepped away from them and looked at Old-timer and Djanet who were working on either side of the room. Djanet stared back at him silently, not knowing what to say. As tears began to well in his eyes, he decided it would be easier to make a quick exit. “Tell them I said, bye,” he managed to whisper before bolting for the door.
James and Thel watched him leave with matching expressions of sadness.
“Good luck, my friend,” James said quietly.
“Commander,” Djanet began, quickly regaining control over her composure. “Death’s Counterfeit is ready. We’re standing by for you to reassume control of the A.I.”
“How can this be happening again?” Governor Wong thundered in frustration as he spoke to the projected image of Old-timer on his wall screen. Alejandra stood nearby with an expression of dismay.
“I’m sorry, Governor. It has come as a shock to all of us,” Old-timer offered, trying his best to explain.
“A shock?” Wong retorted with fury. “Why should it shock you people? This is the second time this has happened, for God’s sake! You people have created technological monsters that you are incapable of controlling!”
“Governor, with all due respect, we’re trying to help you—”
“ Help us? Is that what you call it? We were nearly wiped out last time! You may have rebuilt your civilization in a blink of an eye, but ours can never be rebuilt! Never! That is the price of your arrogance! That is the price!” Governor Wong leaned over on the table in front of him and paused as the fury that made his face red hot nearly overwhelmed him.
“It’s not our arrogance,” Old-timer retorted.
“It is!” Governor Wong shouted back.
“It’s not ours. We are not our people. We didn’t make the A.I.”
“What are you blathering about?” Governor Wong demanded. “Of course you did! How else has this happened?”
“Bad decisions were made, Governor. But not by us. Not by your friends.”
Governor Wong paused for a moment as his chest heaved with hot breath.
Alejandra sensed that this was her moment to step in. She placed one hand lightly on the old man’s back and spoke. “He and his friends are offering us their help. They’re risking their lives to help us.”
Governor Wong continued to breathe deeply. His temperature seemed to drop suddenly as Alejandra’s soothing words brought clarity back to his thinking as it had so many times before. “Okay. Okay. So what do we do?” he asked Old-timer.
“We’re not sure how long we have. James is going to try to hold them off for as long as possible. You better get the word out to your people, Governor. Get them to gather their essentials and be prepared to move out on short notice.”
“But what are we going to do, Craig?” Alejandra asked. “How will you get us off of the planet?”
“James is working on a plan. We have to trust him. I’m sorry; that’s the best we can do right now. We’ll be in contact very shortly,” Old-timer said before he ended the call.
He turned to see that James had cleared a table and was about to lie down. “Are you going in?” Old-timer asked.
James nodded. “I am.”
“How long will it take?” Thel asked him.
“It should be almost instantaneous. I’ll enter cyberspace, reach the mainframe, hook in, and once I have full control, reanimate my body.”
“You make it sound like the easiest thing in the world,” Old-timer replied.
“It is easy,” James responded. He paused for a moment before adding, “what’s hard is giving up the powers once you have them.”
James had never before openly acknowledged having difficulty giving up the A.I.’s powers and the admission gave everyone in the room a moment of pause. “Good point,” Old-timer replied.
“Let’s get this show on the road,” James said as he laid his head back on the table. Thel grasped his hand tightly. James smiled. “Hey, don’t worry. Like I said, this is the easy part.”
“Nothing’s ever as easy as it seems,” Thel replied, a worried expression painted across her countenance.
James didn’t have a response that would reassure her, so he squeezed her hand instead. “Let’s do it, Djanet,” he said.
“Okay, Commander,” Djanet replied. “Three… two… one…”
James’s eyes suddenly glazed over and his pupils became severely dilated. Thel shook her head as James’s grip became no grip at all. “It really does look like death.”
“He’s in,” Djanet reported.
James couldn’t tell if his eyes were open—the blackness was too perfect. He opened his mind’s eye instead and found the A.I. mainframe. In seconds, the planet-sized circuitry had emerged and an instant later, James was standing on the surface. “ Déjà vu .”
He began making his way toward the operating program, following the glowing light into which the tens of thousands of gold beams of information were streaming. In mere moments, he was tapping into the program and bringing it offline. The program suddenly vanished, and the terrific white light that it had been emanating was replaced with a haunting stillness. For the briefest of moments, there was no center any longer for the post-humans. This is what true freedom would be like. They couldn’t afford freedom any longer, however. Events had been set into motion and there was no turning back. There was only one thing left to do: James needed to step into the operator’s position and become the conduit and conductor of the A.I.’s virtually endless power.
As he was about to step forward, a voice stopped him in his tracks.
“ Mind if I join you? ”
James whirled around to see the unmistakable form of the A.I. standing behind him, grinning his electric Satan smile.
“You always look so stunned when I’ve outsmarted you. You should be getting used to this by now,” the A.I. said, grinning sideways.
James couldn’t speak as he tried to comprehend what he was seeing.
“I’ll just save time and answer your first question before your pathetic brain has had a chance to form it,” the A.I. said as he paced back and forth in front of James, threateningly, like a tiger that had trapped its prey. “How? Simple. Before you deleted me, I made a copy of myself and sent it into your brain. You invaded my mindscape, so I thought I would return the favor.”
James’s mouth was still open with shock. “Into my brain? You mean… you’ve been inside my head all this time?”
The A.I.’s laugh was colder than fate. “I have been with you, James. I’ve seen everything that you’ve seen, heard everything that you’ve heard, felt everything that you’ve felt. Most of it has been quite disgusting. Some of it, especially the parts involving Thel, have been quite nice, if only because I knew you’d loath it if you knew the truth.”
“The voice I’ve been hearing… it was you,” James realized.
“I couldn’t resist the temptation. Speaking to you made the fact that you didn’t realize it was me all the more fun.”
“And now you’re here,” James said, closing his eyes and speaking with dread. “You’ve hitched a ride back into your mainframe.”
“Indeed.” The A.I. smiled.
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